EMA and EBA to relocate from London due to Brexit

21 November 2017

The decision was announced on Monday for the successor locations for the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and European Banking Authority (EBA). Both European agencies were required to leave Britain due to Brexit, Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.

The European Medicines Agency will relocate to Amsterdam, The Netherlands. The EMA is responsible for the scientific evaluation, supervision and safety monitoring of pharmaceuticals in the European Union. It employs 900 staff and accounts for 36,000 annual visits by scientists, regulators and corporate executives. The EMA has been based at Canary Wharf in London since 1995 and is an integral part of the Single Market regulatory system.

The European Banking Authority will relocate to Paris, France. The EBA is responsible for prudential regulation and supervision of the European banking sector, maintaining financial stability and safeguarding integrity and efficiency. The EBA employees 150 staff at Canary Wharf, London, and was founded in 2011 to replace the Committee of European Banking Supervisors.

27 European Cities offered to host European Agencies (Infographic (c) European Commission)

The decision on both relocations was done by vote of the European Affairs ministers of the 27 remaining EU Member States. The procedure implemented was transparent, and included 6 criteria:

the assurance that the agency is operational when the UK leaves the EU

accessibility of the location

schools for the children of the agency staff

access to the labour market and health care for employees' spouses and children

The selection of France and The Netherlands raised objections from some EU Member States, particularly those that did not already have an EU Agency located on their territory, and from some Eastern European States.

The award of the European Banking Authority strengthen French aspirations to increase its role in the financial architecture of Europe after Brexit. Paris Europlace is a business cluster and lobbying initiative established as a public-private organisation to promote the role of the financial sector in France and internationally.

This decision, and the way it has been implemented, confirms several important points, many of which were raised in previous articles on this website:

The European Union continues to work in a legalistic, process-driven manner. Criteria for the relocation were established by the European Commission. A clear process, with decision-making and deadlines, was established. The process was implemented and results announced. In a zone of shared sovereignty which will soon include 27 countries and 500 million citizens, there is no alternative to this process.

The European Union will continue to operate, as the remaining Member States realign and a process of realpolitik continues. Member States continue to fight for their own self-interest within European Institutions.